This course surveys the history of Latin America from the arrival of the first peoples on the American continents to the present. We will examine a variety of issues including economics, democracy,
racism, class structures, gender, ethnicity, human rights, globalization, and popular movements. Rather than analyzing Latin America from a North American point of view, we will examine how Latin
Americans view themselves and how their culture, economics, and politics have developed in different directions than the United States and Europe.

This course fulfills the History mode of inquiry in the Liberal Studies Program. In this mode, students will study a broad topic or major geographic area over an extended period of time and will
demonstrate competence in one or more of the following areas, which characterize the work of historians:

thinking in terms of causation, change over time, contingency, context, and chronological frameworks;

the content and methodologies of humanistic and social-scientific disciplines to study and interpret the past;

analyzing the interplay between choices individuals have made and developments societies have undergone; and

understanding the social and aesthetic richness of different cultures.

Requirements

You are expected and required to attend every class session, and you are responsible for the material covered in the lectures, readings and films, and for any announcements made in class. Unexcused
absences will negatively affect your grade. Please drop me an email note if you are sick or otherwise unable to attend class. If you have a disability or any conflicts which may affect your class
performance, please bring this to my attention immediately so that we can make arrangements for this to be a positive learning experience for you. Please let me know if you have suggestions for
improving the class. I do not treat students as empty vessels waiting to be filled with knowledge; we need to be constituents rather than simply recipients of our education. Our goal is to challenge
existing assumptions, engage alternative viewpoints, and encourage critical thinking. Through the study of history, we seek to empower ourselves to be better citizens and to provide ourselves with the
skills necessary to play a positive and educated role in society.

Readings

Following are the required books for this class. Read the assignments before class so that you are prepared to carry on an intelligent discussion of the material in class. Lectures and discussions will
complement the readings and assume the base level of knowledge which they present, so it is critically important that you keep up with the readings. Do not wait until the last minute to buy these books
since about half-way through the semester the bookstore will return unsold copies to the publisher.

Symcox, Geoffrey and Sullivan Blair. Christopher Columbus and the Enterprise of the Indies: A Brief History with Documents. Boston, Mass: Bedford, 2005. ISBN: 0312410212

Assignments and grades

Course grades will be based on the following assignments. You can check your grade progress on the class Blackboard web page (there is a total of 1000 possible points in the class). More detailed
information on the written assignments will be posted to the web page. I do not accept "drop and run" papers. Grades on late assignments will be penalized 10 percent for each day that they are late.
Successful completion of all assignments is required to receive credit for this class.

The map quiz will require identification of 20 Latin American countries and their capitals, and will be taken on the class Blackboard web page. The Colombus and Venezuela essays are to be three to
five pages long, typed, double spaced, include citations, a bibliography, page numbers, and follow good essay form. Later I will post more elaborate descriptions of the questions you should address in
the essays to the class web page. We will decide on the exact format of the midterm exam later, but it may include objective (multiple choice, matching, true/false, etc.) as well as identification or
essay questions. The final exam is comprehensive and will include everything we have covered this semester. We will begin each class period with identifying and giving the significance of one
identification term drawn from a list posted to the course web page for each of the assigned readings in the Keen/Haynes textbook. These will be graded on a scale of 1 to 5 points. One point means
that you are present, 2 points indicate that something was fundamentally wrong with your response, 3 points indicate a rote response from the text, 4 points represent analytical thought, and 5 points are
for responses that reveal critical thought that extends significantly beyond the text and places the term in a broad historical context. Each week by noon on Thursday (except for weeks 1 and 8), post an
analysis of a newspaper article from the previous week on Latin America from one of the 3 daily newspapers distributed on campus (New York Times, St. Louis Post Dispatch, or USA Today) to the
discussion board on the class web page. Briefly describe the content of the article and then analyze its historical, social, and political significance. Be sure to include the title and author (if given) of the
article, the name of the newspaper, and the date it was published, and the section/page numbers. Place the title of the article in the subject line of the post so that subsequent analyses on the same article
are together in one thread. The critiques will be graded on a scale similar to the daily identification terms.